Dead Heat hc-7 Read online

Page 4


  She turned to the window, pretending to look out. She pressed the flesh-coloured transmit button affixed to the palm of her hand, tilted her head slightly to move her mouth a little closer to the button-shaped mike on her collar. Trying desperately not to move her lips — why were there no miming sessions in the surveillance training programme? — she said, ‘Anyone hearing me? I have an eyeball. . repeat, I have an eyeball. . Star of India.’

  Outside a big four-wheel-drive monstrosity pulled up and double parked. Jo noticed that the steering wheel was on the left-hand side and the man who was driving was able to get out straight on to the pavement.

  No one replied to her transmission. She spoke again, urgently. ‘Dale? Ronnie? Ken? Anyone hearing me? I have an eyeball. . repeat, eyeball.’

  The driver of the 4x4 entered the restaurant. He looked at her as he walked past. A very bad feeling, something akin to the pain she had endured when her appendix had to come out, creased the pit of her stomach. Somehow she knew this guy had come to meet Turner. And pick him up — otherwise why leave the car outside in such a ridiculous position? She fumbled in her pocket, pulled out her mobile phone and started to dial frantically.

  ‘Andrew Turner?’

  Turner had watched him come into the restaurant. He did not recognize him, but knew he had come from the Spaniard. Turner nodded and appraised him. He looked hard and mean and ready to move. It did not faze Turner, who said, ‘Yeah, that’s me.’

  ‘My orders are to pick you up and convey you to Mr Lopez.’

  Turner quaffed the last of his pint and wiped his lips. He stood up and was glad to see that he was bigger and wider than the man who had come for him. But yet the man’s eyes screamed danger and even Turner felt something almost tangible emanating from him.

  ‘You carrying?’

  ‘Nope.’

  ‘Let me check. Mr Lopez does not like to be surprised.’

  ‘I said I wasn’t.’

  ‘I don’t give a damn what you said. I got a job to do and if you do not comply, then I walk out of here. If you don’t let me check, you don’t have a meet.’

  Turner rolled his jaw ruminatively, peering down his nose at a man who was, after all, only a driver, weighing up whether the issue was worth pushing. He decided to back down.

  ‘OK.’ For the sake of business he relented and lifted his arms.

  The driver skimmed him quickly, lightly, effectively quartering his body within a few seconds. Turner knew he had been searched well. This guy knew his trade.

  ‘What about you?’ Turner sneered.

  The man considered Turner and his face broke into a crooked grin. He spun on his heels and Turner followed him out to the car. As he passed the attractive woman seated alone at the table near the door, who was talking on her mobile, Turner blew her a kiss. He heard her say, ‘Hiya, sweetie.’

  There was some kind of a meet on. That much was obvious from what Jo had seen happen, having watched the interaction between the two men by means of the reflection in the window. The quick chat. The search. The exit. Turner was on his way to see someone very important.

  Her phone connected at the very moment Turner came alongside her at the table and blew her a kiss. As O’Brien answered, she found herself saying, ‘Hiya sweetie,’ and almost choking on her words.

  ‘Hello to you, too,’ O’Brien responded in a deep, suggestive voice. ‘I didn’t know we had something going.’

  ‘We don’t. My radio’s down,’ Jo babbled quickly. ‘I’ve eyeballed the target and he’s just getting into a big four-wheel-drive parked outside the Star of India.’

  ‘Jesus.’

  ‘Where are you?’

  ‘I’m out of the car, about five minutes from it, down in the Frog.’ O’Brien was referring to a pub about a quarter of a mile away, on the way to the city centre. ‘I got bored too.’

  ‘Shit. . well. .’ Jo braved herself to openly watch the big vehicle muscle its way into the evening traffic towards the city, causing other traffic to brake hard with a cacophony of angry horns. The driver stuck up a middle finger and accelerated away. ‘He’s headed your way, Dale. . get out of the pub and watch out for a big Yank-style four-by-four. I’m gonna leg it to the car.’

  Jo rose from the table, surprising the waiter who was on his way to her with the much anticipated mixed kebab. His Indian accent failed him as he immediately — and rightly — believed she was going to do a runner, although most people did that after they had eaten.

  ‘Oi! Where the fuck do you think you’re going?’ he shouted at Jo’s retreating back.

  ‘Sorry pal, got to rush,’ she yelled as she exited, did a cartoon-like skid and hared towards the car. She dodged around numerous people now out for a night on the pavements of Rusholme, then veered into the street where the car was parked unattended — and locked. The realization that she could not drive the car away only hit her as she saw the vehicle. She slowed to a trot, then a walk, and when she got to the car, she kicked it in frustration. Dale had the keys.

  Her mobile chirped: O’Brien.

  ‘Jo — the four-wheel-drive,’ he panted, ‘just gone past me then U-turned again, heading back to Rusholme. Obviously surveillance-conscious.’

  ‘Yeah, good — but I can’t get in the car. You’ve got the bloody keys.’

  ‘I’m running now,’ O’Brien said, his phone going dead.

  Jo went back to the main road and stood on the corner of the street to watch, hopefully, for Turner’s reappearance. She decided to use the time constructively and keyed the number of one of her other team members into the phone. She was going to alert them one by one.

  ‘Hey — you!’

  Jo twirled. It was the Indian waiter.

  ‘Hey, you — you order food, we cook it — you fuckin’ pay for it,’ he said.

  ‘Shit!’ Her eyes rolled heavenwards. ‘Look — just fuck off, will you? I haven’t time to explain, okay?’

  ‘I’ll call the cops.’

  The 4x4 containing Turner and his unknown chauffeur crawled past in the traffic, which was heavy now.

  ‘I am the cops,’ Jo blasted him, keeping one eye on the traffic and the other on the irate little waiter. She extracted her warrant card with a flourish and shoved it into his face. The 4x4 was disappearing in traffic now.

  ‘Don’t give you a right to do what you did,’ chuntered the waiter.

  ‘Look, just fuck off, will you? I’ll make it right, but just now I’m a bit busy.’

  ‘Jo!’ screamed Dale O’Brien, appearing on the scene at a run. He went straight for the car, clicking the remote as he got to it, diving into the driving seat.

  ‘We’ll settle up with you, honest,’ Jo assured the waiter. She backed away from him, hands palm forwards, placating him. ‘Honest.’ She jumped into the car next to O’Brien. ‘What a bleedin’ cock-up,’ she said. ‘Go left — he went thataway.’

  She sat back and took a deep breath.

  Next to her, O’Brien was breathing frantically and his hands and feet were dithering on the controls. He edged the car into the evening traffic, poking its nose out hopefully. No one was for letting him out.

  ‘Come on for God’s sake,’ he muttered under his breath. ‘C’mon you impolite bastards, let me out.’ He thumped the steering wheel.

  ‘We’re gonna lose him,’ Jo stated, feet tapping. ‘What a cock-up.’

  ‘I can’t believe this traffic.’

  There was a gap a millisecond wide and O’Brien went for it, his tyres skidding and the car lurching across the line of cars, only to find there was no gap at all to get into on the opposite carriageway, thereby finding himself stuck at an angle halfway across the road, completely halting traffic in one direction. No one was feeling patient and horns began to sound, but then someone did slow for him and wave him in. He gave a relieved wave and shot into the line and started to crawl along — only to pass Turner in the 4x4 going back in the opposite direction towards the city. He had spun round again.

  ‘This is
a bloody farce,’ Jo simpered, keeping her face firmly forward-facing.

  ‘Where’s everybody else?’ O’Brien demanded.

  Jo spoke into her radio again. It was dead. So was O’Brien’s.

  She reverted to her mobile phone again, not having completed the call she had started earlier to one of her other colleagues. She saw that her battery charge indicator was low.

  ‘Right, right, right, if he can do it, so can I.’ stated O’Brien. This time he was ruthless. He swung the car into a gap that wasn’t there and completed a spectacular U-turn so he was now heading in the same direction as their target. ‘If I see the bastard going back the other way again, I’ll bloody cry.’

  ‘Can’t get through,’ Jo said, pulling the mobile away from her ear. She pressed redial.

  O’Brien squeezed in a double overtake, not recommended in such busy circumstances, but he pulled it off without damage or injury and stood on the accelerator, tail-gating the car ahead.

  ‘Nothing!’ Jo spat contemptuously at her phone. ‘Aaargh!’ she screamed angrily, then screamed again, this time in fear, as O’Brien executed another daring overtake followed by a wicked swerve into a space which he alone created.

  ‘How the hell did you get in here?’

  ‘I’m good at getting big things into tight places,’ he boasted.

  Jo chuckled, the tension released for a moment. Then she shook her phone, still unable to get through. She tried the number of another team member. This time she connected. ‘Ken. . it’s Jo. . we’ve eyeballed the target. . he’s headed towards. .’ Click. Whirr. The line went dead as the signal broke. ‘Shit. I do not effin’ believe this. Technology, I’ve shit it.’ She watched the signal-strength bars reappear on the mobile-phone display. She redialled again.

  As they hit a set of traffic lights on red, they found themselves stuck in a long queue of traffic.

  ‘Can you see him, or have we lost him?’ Jo asked.

  O’Brien opened his window and stuck his head out, craning to see. ‘Dunno.’

  With the mobile to her ear, Jo opened the door and, holding the door pillar, swung herself up to get an elevated view across the roofs of the cars in front of her.

  O’Brien heard her slam a hand down on the roof. He ducked instinctively. She dropped back into her seat. ‘About eight cars ahead,’ she said, her phone still stuck to her ear. She pulled it away and glared crossly at it. ‘Blooming thing,’ she said and threw it down in the footwell. ‘Gimme yours,’ she demanded of O’Brien and held out her hand.

  The traffic began moving slowly.

  ‘You’re very cautious,’ Andy Turner commented, following the numerous U-turns.

  The man in the driving seat said nothing, concentrated on driving and checking his mirrors.

  ‘I like that,’ Turner said.

  ‘Don’t get to like anything about me,’ the man warned.

  The cars moved so slowly that by the time they reached the traffic lights, they were turning back to red, Turner’s vehicle having gone through towards the city. Jo looked aghast as the amber light appeared. O’Brien swore, then took a chance.

  He pulled out and accelerated past the car in front and shot the red light. He made it over the junction before the cross-traffic began to move.

  ‘Well done,’ Jo breathed.

  O’Brien held on tight to the wheel, but made no reply.

  ‘I just hope he hasn’t seen us carrying out death manoeuvres and basically doing everything we can to draw attention to ourselves, y’know? Us being undercover, highly trained surveillance operatives and all? So far we’ve done everything we shouldn’t have.’

  ‘What’s new? It’s usually a wing and a prayer at the best of times. At least we’re still in touch with him.’

  ‘But not with the rest of the team,’ Jo said miserably. She tried to call Ken on O’Brien’s mobile, but could not make a connection despite there being a charge in his battery and a strong signal. ‘Somebody up there doesn’t like us tonight,’ she said. She tried another team member and this time got through.

  The 4x4 weaved through the centre of Manchester, emerging on the other side of the city on the A56, which led out past Manchester Prison, towards Prestwich and Bury.

  O’Brien hung in behind him, keeping as far back as he dared without actually losing sight. It was not ideal. A one-car follow was always tough, but it was all he had. There was no doubt that, just at that moment, the team was in disarray and there seemed little hope of pulling it back together. Jo had contacted some of the others and they were doing their best to play catch-up, but she was beginning to despair a little because the battery on O’Brien’s mobile was losing strength and the radios still did not work, even with a change of channel. She used the phone sparingly, but knew it would not last for long and she also knew that the further Turner travelled, the more stretched and ineffective the team would be.

  Not a comforting scenario.

  The only good side of it was that the 4x4 was such a big vehicle it was fairly easy to keep tabs on, particularly with its cluster of high-level brakes across the rear window, which shone like Blackpool illuminations every time the brake pedal got pressed.

  Turner and his driver took them past the entrance to Sedgley Park, Greater Manchester Police’s training school, then into Prestwich, staying on the main road all the way.

  Jo speculated where they could be headed.

  ‘Motorway junction’s up ahead,’ she mumbled. ‘Straight across to Bury, or left on to the M60 ring road towards south Manchester, or east out towards Rochdale, or beyond to Leeds. If he goes on to the motorway either direction and puts his foot down, I think we’re snookered.’

  ‘Let’s not give up yet,’ said O’Brien grimly.

  They followed through Prestwich and approached the motorway junction. On the left, just before the roundabout was a petrol station which the 4x4 drew into. O’Brien sailed past on to the roundabout. This gave Jo the opportunity to scribble down the registered number of the car and to have a glimpse of the driver again as he climbed out and went to a pump. She saw he was looking around warily and that he actually watched her drive past.

  O’Brien went on to the roundabout, circled it twice, covered by fairly heavy traffic. Turner’s vehicle rolled off the forecourt and accelerated straight down on to the M60 southbound as O’Brien was three-quarters of the way through his third circle.

  ‘Motorway,’ Jo said unnecessarily. She quickly relayed the message to another team member who was still trying to get through heavy theatre traffic on Deansgate in Manchester City centre, which was a long way away now. They might as well be on the moon. She and O’Brien were effectively on their own.

  O’Brien tore down the motorway slip road and hit the main carriageway at 70mph, cutting ruthlessly into the first lane, out into the middle, then into the fast. He was expecting not to come into close contact with the 4x4, but suddenly there it was ahead of them in the middle lane, travelling sedately. Another tactic for the surveillance-conscious criminal — and O’Brien almost fell for it. Instinctively he took his foot off the gas and drifted into the centre lane, dropping about half a dozen cars behind the target.

  ‘That was a bit close for comfort. I hope he hasn’t made us,’ said Jo. If they had passed the 4x4 she knew they would definitely have been blown out of the water and that would have been the end of the night’s operation. As it was, they were clinging to the remnants.

  Then, just to make matters worse, the big car lurched out into the fast lane and surged forwards.

  ‘Bugger!’ O’Brien cursed.

  They were lucky to see the back end of the 4x4 leaving the motorway on the exit which looped round on to the M61. They were only just able to cut sharply across the traffic themselves and throw up road dust as their car angled across the chevron markings on the exit. By the time they reached the point where the M60 joined the M61, and there was also the choice of going onto the A666 towards Bolton, the 4x4 had beaten them. It was nowhere to be seen.
/>   Al Major was not amused.

  ‘You incompetent idiot,’ he sneered down the phone. At her end, Jo Coniston could see his face in her mind’s eye. She bit her tongue and thought better than to point out what an ill-judged and purely hopeful operation it had been from the word go. . and that she had done well to even come across Turner in the first place. . and, and, and. . but she didn’t. She kept her mouth firmly closed.

  ‘What do you want us to do?’ She was standing at a pay phone at Bolton West Motorway Services on the M61, formerly known as Anderton Services. Dale O’Brien was standing behind her, hopping from foot to foot as she got their bollocking.

  There was silence at the other end of the phone whilst Major thought about his response. Jo handed O’Brien a slip of paper on which she had written the result of the PNC check on the 4x4 registered number — it had come back with no current keeper.

  ‘Call it a day,’ Major decided. ‘I’ll debrief when you get back.’

  Jo knew what that meant — a real roasting, probably with his anger directed mostly at her for no other reason than she had dumped him.

  ‘OK.’ She hung up, turned to her hyperactive partner. ‘Back to base for a court martial. . except I don’t feel like rushing back — let’s have a coffee here first.’

  Andy Turner shifted uncomfortably. He felt like he was being interviewed for a job — although he had to use his imagination somewhat because he had never actually worked in his life other than in a criminal capacity and interviews for such positions were fairly unstructured at best. He looked across the table at the Spaniard, feeling himself bubbling with frustration.

  The Spaniard was a very important man. He was a scout on the lookout for business opportunities for his boss, a very big underworld figure based in Barcelona. Turner knew he was lucky to get to talk to him, to pitch his business. If he could get this guy’s nod, he would be going sky high.

  It was not easy. The guy was cagey and inquisitive. Questions, questions, questions — and he had done his homework on Turner, something which Turner found disquieting.

  Turner realized he had to keep his cool. Don’t get riled. Go with the flow. Answer the questions. Tell the truth where necessary, otherwise bullshit. . but above all, do not lose it.